REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST IQI2 Tas 
Crataegus spissa Sargent 
N. Y State Mus. Bul. 122. 122 (1908). 
North Elba. 
Crataegus chateaugayensis Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 121 (1908). 
Near Chateaugay lake. 
: Crataegus harryi Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 124 (1908). 
Richmond, Canadice lake and Honeoye lake. 
Crataegus neo-baxteri Sargent 
N. Y State Mus. Bul. 122. 74 (1908). 
Tuscarora. 
ANOMALAE 
Crataegus saundersiana Sargent 
Ontario Nat. Sci. Bul. 4. 66 (1908). 
Palmyra; also in southern Ontario. 
Crataegus brachyloba Sargent 
: N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 75 (1908). 
Buffalo. 
Crataegus fallsiana n. sp. 
Leaves obovate to ovate, acuminate, gradually or abruptly nar- 
rowed at the entire base, sharply and often doubly serrate above, 
with straight glandular teeth and divided above the middle into 
four or five pairs of short acute lobes; nearly one-third grown when 
the flowers open about the roth of June and then yellow-green and 
roughened above by short white hairs and paler and glabrous below, 
and at maturity glabrous, dark yellow-green on the upper surface, 
light yellow-green on the lower surface, 6 to 10 cm long and 5 to 7 
em wide, with stout midribs and slender primary veins; petioles 
slender, wing-margined at the apex, glabrous, dark red in the 
autumn, 3 to 4 cm in length. Flowers 3 cm in diameter, on long 
slender glabrous pedicels, in wide lax mostly 6—10-flowered 
corymbs, the elongated lower peduncles from the axils of upper 
leaves; calyx-tube narrowly obconic, glabrous, its lobes gradually 
narrowed to the base, long, slender, acuminate, entire or slightly 
dentate near the middle, glabrous on the outer surface, villose on 
